Happy May Ray Day!

May 19th is May Ray Day, designed to celebrate the beginning of warm days outside that the sun provides - unless you live near Lake Superior of course. I didn't know such a celebratory day existed until now so to celebrate I found some facts about the sun.

3. Classified as a G2 dwarf due to its size, heat, and chemical makeup, the sun is a medium-sized star. A G star is cool (between 5,000-6,000 on the Kelvin temperature scale) and has a complex chemistry, which means its makeup includes chemicals heavier than helium.

4. Based on the average life of a G2 star, the present age of the sun is estimated to be 4.6 billion years, halfway through its lifetime.

5. Four million tons of hydrogen are consumed by the sun every second, which helps to create the sun’s composition of 75 percent hydrogen, 23 percent helium, and 2 percent heavier elements.

6. Scientists have determined that the sun will continue to burn hydrogen collected in its core for another five billion years or so, and then helium will become its primary fuel.

7. Approximately 109 planet Earths would fit on the surface of the sun and more than one million planet Earths would fit inside of the sun.

8. Every 11 years, solar activity surges. The sunspots that pepper the sun explode, hurtling massive clouds of gas known as "CMEs" through the solar system. This is called “solar maximum.”

9. Approximately every 11 years, the sun reverses its overall magnetic polarity: its north magnetic pole becomes a south pole, and vice versa.

10. The sun is the closest star to Earth and is 149.60 million kilometers (92.96 million miles) away.

11. At its core, the sun’s temperature is about 15 million degrees Celsius (about 27 million degrees Fahrenheit).

12. The sun rotates on its axis once every 25.38 Earth days or 609.12 hours.

13. 100,000,000,000 tons of dynamite would have to be detonated every second to match the energy produced by the sun.

14. A person weighing 150 pounds on Earth would weigh 4,200 pounds on the sun because the sun’s gravity is 28 times that of Earth.